A short history of the A/I Collective and its misfortunes

The A/I Collective (meaning autistici/inventati) was born in March 2001 when individuals and collectives dealing in technology, privacy, cyber rights and political activism met in Italy. Our fundamental aim is to provide free communication tools on a wide basis, while pushing people to choose free rather than commercial communication modes.
We would like to arouse people's awareness about the need to protect their privacy and to escape the looting which is indiscriminately perpetrated by governments and corporations alike on both data and personalities.

Nowadays, more than ten years after our first server was activated, A/I hosts nearly 10,000 mailboxes, over 1500 websites, more than 3000 blogs
and around 2500 mailing lists. Apart from these services, we offer a free encrypted instant messaging service via jabber, IRC chatrooms, an anonymous
remailer and a VPN, and we have been traveling around Italy and Europe trying to explain and spread our ideas on digital communication.
At the moment, the community surfing in the obscure sea of the A/I services amounts to thousands of people.

It's not that many, especially if you consider the grim global scenary we are struggling against, but it's enough to attract
unwanted attention, censorship and overt repression: as early as 2003 we received the official request of handing
over some mail users' personal data, but as everybody knows, we follow a determinate policy of not keeping any logs or any
information about the identity of people using our services. So the inquirers could gain nothing from us, and it's been like that ever since our birth.
In 2004 one of the websites we hosted (Zenmai)[1]
was shut since Trenitalia (the Italian railways company) thought the joke our user was making about their support for army vehicle transportation was not really funny,
but after legal mishappenings we managed to win the case. [Now that website is again online and Google has a new story to tell about Trenitalia.]

That same year, finally, the police seized and copied the content of all disks in our server
with the help of the provider which hosted it (Aruba) and without us knowing anything about it
(we discovered it by chance one year later[2] while reviewing
the acts of the case where we were asked to shut down a single mailbox [3]). We were thus forced
to find a strategy allowing us to make a significant step forward in our defence of people's privacy and rights.
That's why we have developed the R* Plan and spent a significant amount of time traveling
around Italy and Europe to explain what had happened and what would happen next.

After 2005 we have been constantly pestered by prosecutors and security forces (and even by the Vatican! [4])
asking us to hand over users' data and identities and we are proud to say we were always able to answer:
we are sorry, but we do not have them. Recently (2010) some very smart policeman managed to convince a
judge to order the full seizing of three servers in three different countries to find out if we REALLY
did not have any data about a user's activity on our servers [5].
After spending a lot of public money (for a couple of graffiti on a wall), the judge ended up with a lot of encrypted
files with no useful information inside, and maybe he'll think twice about giving out other investigations to the cunning policeman.

Right now, we go on surfing the dark ocean of the Internet with the very same ideas we began with:
everyone should be able to use freely and without fear the communication tools offered by the digital world,
exploting them to struggle against injustice and for people's rights and dignity.
And someone has to be able to provide people struggling with appropriate tools.
Knowledge and power should be shared. Control and repression should be fought against. We have been nought, we shall be all.